Turner Classic Movies Thumbs Nose At Trump With Full Day Of Anti-Fascist Films

The network aired Charlie Chaplin's "The Great Dictator," "Confessions of a Nazi Spy" and more the day after Trump's inauguration.
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Turner Classic Movies, a vintage film channel, appeared to address Donald Trump’s return to the White House with some pointed post-inauguration counter-programming.

The cable channel filled its schedule Tuesday with back-to-back films featuring explicitly anti-fascist and anti-Nazi themes.

Seeming to send a message with its carefully picked movie marathon, TCM’s day began with 1937′s “Black Legion,” a Humphrey Bogart crime drama that warns of the specter of white supremacy.

That was followed by the World War II-era films “Confessions of a Nazi Spy” (1939) and “The Mortal Storm,” a 1940 Jimmy Stewart drama about Nazi Germany’s persecution of Jews.

Next up was Charlie Chaplin’s 1941 black comedy, “The Great Dictator,” an anti-fascist spoof that, along with his capitalism-critical movie “Modern Times,” was used as evidence of the silent film star’s communist sympathies during the Red Scare of the late 1940s and early ’50s.

Chaplin, a British citizen, was essentially exiled from the U.S. in 1952 when he was denied reentry to America after a trip to Europe during the height of the McCarthy era.

TCM seems to have something on their mind today.

Oscar Goff (@theoscargoff.bsky.social) 2025-01-21T13:20:48.850Z

Following Chaplin classic was 1944′s “The Seventh Cross” and 1943′s “Edge of Darkness.”

“The Seventh Cross,” starring Spencer Tracy, follows a prisoner after his escape from a German concentration camp. The Errol Flynn picture “The Edge of Darkness” is about one Norwegian village’s fight to resist the Nazis.

The day concluded with the World War II spy thriller, “Background to Danger.”

Turner Classic Movies did not immediately respond to HuffPost’s questions about its sharp slate of Tuesday programming, but the network’s media mogul namesake, Ted Turner, has openly supported progressive causes for decades.

The businessman has backed health care reform and pushed politicians to confront the climate crisis. Though he has never explicitly spoken out against Trump, he did endorse former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in her 2016 bid for the presidency.

TCM’s subtle show of resistance was in sharp contrast to the actions of many of Turner’s billionaire brethren, who appear to be welcoming the start of a second Trump era with open arms.

Meta’s Mark Zuckerberg, Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, Google CEO Sundar Pichai and Apple’s Tim Cook were all in the room when Trump took his oath of office Monday in the U.S. Capitol Rotunda.

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